Vladimir Medinsky, known for public statements that often veer toward the hyper-patriotic, asserted in an interview published on June 22 that Netflix is part of a U.S. government mind-control project.

“And, what, you thought these gigantic startups emerge by themselves? One schoolboy sat down, thought for a bit, and then billions of dollars rained down from above?” he was quoted as saying in the interview with the Russian news agency Rambler.

“It turns out that that our ideological friends [the U.S. government] understand perfectly well that this is the art form that is the most important,” Medinsky continued, alluding to a quotation by Soviet founder Vladimir Lenin about the influence of cinema on the masses.

They understand “with the help of Netflix, how to enter every home, to creep into every television, and through that very television, into the heads of every person on Earth,” Medinsky said.

Founded in 1998 by U.S. entrepreneurs Reed Hastings and Marc Randolph, California-based Netflix, which started out as a DVD-by-mail service, now says it offers its streaming services in 190 countries, including Russia.

The company did not immediately respond to e-mails seeking comment.

One of the service’s flagship series, House Of Cards offers a deeply cynical look at U.S. politicians. That was the reason, according to Russian journalist Mikhail Zygar’s 2015 book All The Kremlin’s Men, that Putin recommended the series — which is based on a British production of the same name — to Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu after his 2012 appointment.

For his part, Medinsky has gained a reputation for making bombastic, nationalistic and sometime outlandish allegations since becoming culture minister in 2012.

He has called for patriotic summer camps and films, and last year called for a “patriotic Internet” saying the West had launched “a new blitzkrieg” against Russia.

Last week, at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum Medinsky suggested that Russian animated films had too many “Asian faces”. That elicited wide derision in places like Yakutia, the Siberian republic whose main ethnic group is non-Slavic.